This relativism is what Socrates argued against. He understood that there some things are true and some things false, independently of what we think about them. Evaluating ideas in terms of this truth, in terms of some standard outside ourselves, was the starting place from which Plato, Aristotle, etc carried on. That is a lot different than "man is the measure of all things."
Here is a description of what the culture was like before Socrates:
1. there is no master story that underlies humanity (for a Christian this would involve the fall and the process of redemption)
2. no standard by which to judge another person's reasoning
3. there is no such thing as objectivity
4. no moral absolutes
5. deep suspicion of all ideas, because ideas are always manipulated for personal reasons
This is just a partial list, but does it look familiar? It isn't that much different than the postmodern, relativistic culture we live in. Once again, there is nothing new under the sun, but Christ.
2 comments:
The description of the "sophists" sounds like it might apply to some modern lawyers. Or maybe that's really the definition of the term?
Remember Pontius Pilot's inquiry "What is Truth?" Any competent political leader in that setting would have to be "flexible". I'm guessing that he may have regarded reality as something you fabricate rather than something to get to know (if it allows you to discover it.)
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